The application
13 The application for a determination of native title was lodged with the National Native Title Tribunal on 27 June 1997, and deemed to be filed in the Federal Court on 30 September 1998.
14 A second application for a determination of native title was filed on behalf of the Darumbal People on 22 January 1999.
15 An area of land in the western part of the Darumbal claim area was the subject of competing assertions of native title rights by the Southern Barada Kabalbara Yetimarala People. In 2011, through a process of mediation, representatives of the Darumbal and the Southern Barada Kabalbara Yetimarala Peoples reached agreement in relation to the boundary between their respective countries and in relation to an area of shared country.
16 On 26 July 2012, the Court ordered that the two Darumbal applications be combined and conducted as one proceeding under file number QUD6131/1998.
17 On 27 March 2013, the application was separated, by order of the Court, into Part A and Part B (the area that was the subject of the wholly overlapping claim by the Barada Kabalbara Yetimarala People).
18 The applicant now seeks determination on behalf of the Darumbal People over land and waters within Part B.
19 The persons comprising the applicant are Alan Douglas Hatfield, Amanda Meredith, Rodney William Mann, Pauline Cora, Vanessa Ross and Warren John Malone.
20 The respondents to the application are the State of Queensland, the Livingstone Shire Council and Ergon Energy Corporation Limited.
21 All parties to the application have reached agreement that native title exists in Part B and as to the nature and extent of those native title rights and interests. That agreement, made under s 87A(1)(b) of the Act, was filed in the Federal Court on 19 September 2023.
22 The evidence of connection filed by the applicant primarily includes claimant evidence in the form of affidavits and witness statements; and six expert reports prepared by anthropologists Peter Blackwood, Paul Memmott and Lee Sackett.
23 The evidence of members of the native title claim group about their traditional laws and customs and rights and responsibilities in respect of land and waters is of the highest importance: Sampi v Western Australia [2005] FCA 777 at [48]. The claimant evidence of connection is comprised of 19 affidavits and 6 outlines of evidence of the following persons:
Affidavit of Alan Douglas Hatfield filed 12 June 2014;
Affidavit of Trevor Leslie Hatfield filed 12 June 2014;
Outline of further evidence of Trevor Leslie Hatfield filed 24 November 2014;
Outline of further evidence of Trevor Leslie Hatfield filed 28 May 2018;
Affidavit of Nyoka Myra Hatfield (nee Cora) filed 12 June 2014;
Outline of further evidence of Nyoka Myra Hatfield (nee Cora) filed 25 November 2014;
Outline of further evidence of Nyoka Myra Hatfield (nee Cora) filed 28 May 2018;
Affidavit of Vanessa Ruth Ross filed 12 June 2014;
Affidavit of Warren John Malone filed 12 June 2014;
Affidavit of Pauline Joyce Cora filed 12 June 2014;
Affidavit of Tosie William Cora filed 12 June 2014;
Affidavit of Rodney William Mann filed 12 June 2014;
Outline of further evidence of Rodney William Mann filed 27 November 2014;
Outline of further evidence of Rodney William Mann filed 28 May 2018;
Affidavit of Pamela Meredith filed 12 June 2014;
Affidavit of Amanda Melanie Meredith filed 12 June 2014;
Affidavit of Roeina Sarah Vea Vea filed 12 June 2014;
Affidavit of Selena Michele Edmund filed 12 June 2014;
Affidavit of Kristina Ann Hatfield filed 12 June 2014;
Affidavit of Tanya Maree Mitchell filed 12 June 2014;
Affidavit of Barry John Mann filed 12 June 2014;
Affidavit of Malcolm Lyle Mann filed 12 June 2014;
Affidavit of Cephra Maria Roma filed 12 June 2014;
Affidavit of Naticia Carleigh Jeanine Meredith filed 12 June 2014;
Affidavit of Cecil Williams filed 11 August 2023.
24 The applicant also relies on the following expert reports:
Peter Blackwood and Paul Memmott, 'Darumbal Native Title Claim' (Anthropologists' Expert Report);
Peter Blackwood and Paul Memmott, 'Darumbal Native Title Claim' (Anthropologists' Expert Report, Supplementary to Conference of Experts, 2-3 October 2014);
Peter Blackwood, 'Review of anthropological evidence and lay evidence regarding Darumbal Native Title Rights and Interests in Part B';
Dr Lee Sackett and Peter Blackwood, 'Barada Kabalbara Yetimarala (BKY) and Darumbal Native Title Claims: Joint Anthropologists';
Dr Lee Sackett and Peter Blackwood, 'Barada Kabalbara Yetimarala People #2 (QUD439/2013) and Darumbal People Part B (QUD6131/1998) Native Title Claims: Agreed Border and Reciprocal Rights and Interests Report'; and
Peter Blackwood, 'Darumbal Native Title Claim QUD30/2019 Part B: Supplementary Anthropological report regarding Darumbal native title rights and interests in Part B'.
25 In the Anthropologists' Expert Report, Mr Blackwood and Professor Memmott explain that the Darumbal society has:
… persisted like an unbroken cable, anchoring successive generations of country to their forebears, such that even with the disruption accorded by colonisation that there has been an identity that has remained stable throughout and that persists to this day, having been passed on through each generation.
26 Mr Blackwood and Professor Memmott observe that the Darumbal People have continued to observe customary ritual practices, which have been handed down to the present generation by their forebears, including with respect to totemic and spiritual beliefs, sites, bush tucker, dispute resolution and decision making.
27 Mr Blackwood and Professor Memmott conclude that the claimants:
[C]ontinue to acknowledge and observe those laws and customs which gave rise to rights and interests in land among indigenous groups who occupied the [Application] area at the time of sovereignty.
28 They were also of the opinion that:
[T]here has been continuity of the three key laws and customs which united the language groups which occupied the claim area at the time of sovereignty as a native title society, through to the Darumbal native title society of today.
29 These three key laws and customs are the laws set out in the myths of their shared cosmology; collective ownership of the land through the relationship between groups and their country allocated to them in the time of their foundation myths; and the laws of filiation by which membership of the group and its sub-divisions passes from generation to generation, and validates anew for each generation the group's possession of its country, its sites, its rites and its language.
30 The Darumbal People are the descendants of the following persons:
Brothers John McPherson or Harry Bauman;
Kate Reid and James Hector;
Clara McKenzie;
Jack Naylor (Jnr);
Maria McKenzie;
Clara Wallace;
Mundabel;
Mary Jones;
Maggie (Mitchell);
Yorky;
Kitty Mulway and Pompey of Stanage; and
who are recognised by the living Darumbal People according to their traditional laws and customs as Darumbal People.
31 The evidence filed, including Mr Blackwood and Professor Memmott's anthropological reports and the witness statements and affidavits provided by the claimants, provide cogent evidence of the continuity of the traditional laws and customs of the Darumbal People extending back to before the time of sovereignty. The evidence supports the claim that the traditional laws acknowledged and the traditional customs observed give the Darumbal People the rights and interests set out in paragraph 6 of the Orders.